Molly May - Claire Lynch/Alison Brown
Just a lad I was of thirteen years
When my father passed away
And I had to take a job as deckhand on the Molly May
And the time
I spent one summer past turned into fifty years
And the sound she made as
She broke the waves still rings within my ears
She was passed to me
When I was twenty three
Captain mills went round the bend
He saw a forerunner on the dock one night
And never sailed again
Superstition be damned
I sailed her proud fair maiden of the sea
There was never another like her
And no one for her but me
Ah the years went by and the tales
Ran high of the catches we brought in
There were times I thought we'd sink her
But her spirit would not give in
Words are spoken and souls are broken
And the bottle shattered mine
I could see that she'd outlive me
I'd not win the war of time
I saw the time with me in my prime
No man could be my equal
Through the eye of a needle
I'd sail her any day
When I grew older I couldn't hold her
My courage slipped away
So they put a young boy
From Canso at the wheel of the Molly May
I was there to see her sail away
In the cold December haze
But the Canso boy had never seen the
Likes of the southeast wind and waves
At the harbor mouth he drifted south
Right into lighthouse rock
And he smashed her keel and laid her low
While I watched there from the dock
I saw the days amid devil waves
No man could be my equal
Through the eye of a needle
I'd sail her any day
When I grew older I couldn't hold her
My courage slipped away
So they put a young boy from Canso
At the wheel of the Molly May
And I wish that I'd gone down boys
At the wheel of the Molly May